Two New drugs maybe tied to US Meningitis outbreak

US health officials identified two new drugs today which may have infected patients with meningitis as they investigate a widening outbreak tied to tainted products from a Massachusetts pharmacy.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) urged doctors to contact patients who received drugs produced by the firm to warn them they are at risk of developing the slow-moving but potentially deadly infection.

“At this point in FDA’s investigation, the sterility of any injectable drugs.. and cardioplegic solutions” produced by the firm are “of significant concern,” the FDA said in a statement.

The New England Compounding Center (NECC) recalled all of its products on October 6 after dozens of people were infected with meningitis following treatment with its steroid injections.

Health officials in 23 states sought out the nearly 14,000 people who received the potentially tainted doses in recent months to warn them of the danger.

They have identified 205 cases of meningitis – and 15 deaths – so far and the numbers have been rising daily.

A long incubation period has complicated efforts – one patient did not develop symptoms until 42 days after receiving a tainted injection.

The FDA did not say how many more people are at risk now that two additional drugs have also been linked to meningitis.

Two transplant patients who received a solution produced by NECC to induce cardiac muscle paralysis during open heart surgery have subsequently developed the rare fungal meningitis, the FDA said.

Another patient who received a different kind of steroid injection has also developed the infection which inflames the protective membranes of the brain and spine.

The FDA cautioned that it has “not confirmed that these three infections were, in fact, caused by an NECC product.”

“Investigation of these patients is ongoing; and there may be other explanations for their Aspergillus infection,” the FDA said in a statement.

The outbreak has led to calls for tighter regulation of the loosely controlled pharmaceutical compounding industry.

Critics said drug manufacturers have found a way to sidestep costly and strict oversight by classifying themselves as pharmacies, which are given freer rein to mix drug compounds for patients.